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Maybe more once you count European and Japanese models. I read somewhere that N Scale is more popular than HO in Japan.
You are aware of this website? It's been around for quite a few years.http://www.spookshow.net/trainstuff.htmlI'm wondering about redundancy.
With regards to Spookshow's work, that most excellent site is focused on reviews of engines. We have excerpted and given credit for that information for reference purposes. In fact we hope to steer more traffic to his site by providing links wherever it makes sense.The purpose of the TroveStar N Scale database is to catalog what exists in terms of product numbers, road names and reporting marks. So if you collect Frisco, you can find all items made for the Frisco road by all vendors.We see the two systems as complimentary as Spookshow's work is focused on categorizing and reviewing body styles but doesn't list out each individual car or engine for the models it covers. There is a need for this type of information so we are trying to provide it.As for the data entry, it will be a bit of a free-for-all. We recommend to anyone participating that they try to stick to a few body styles that they are familiar with so they don't create redundancies with other folks. We already have a handful of contributors and generally I try to give them nudges in different directions so as to avoid overlap.
I don't like the sounds of "no overlap". That means that there are more opportunities for mistakes... Heaven forbid someone like @ChristianJDavis1 go on the site, make an entry with completely inaccurate information, and anyone else who makes an entry correcting the info gets told off for making "overlapping" entries. If a site such as this doesn't focus on important things like body-styles, details, and overall accuracy of the model(s), then what's the point? Not much of a database unless you're purely a collector who just buys stuff for the sake of buying it.
I cranked out a second blog entry on data overlap. http://www.trovestar.com/general/blog/blog.php?Article=14Hopefully this will help answer some of the above questions.As this relates to the promotion, more than one person can claim "credit" for the same entry provided each person contributes valuable data to an entry. I was merely suggesting that to avoid having to perform excessive searching to see if an entry already exists you might wish to ask us "Hey is anyone working on Aurora/Trix Postage Stamp trains already? I own a lot of them and I would like to work on filling out that section." We have no problem if eight people want to work on Postage Stamp trains, but it might be a little frustrating. Just imagine if you were all writing wiki articles about the presidents of the US. Wouldn't you wish to focus your efforts on presidents that nobody else is researching?As for details on the quality of each body style. Each body style has a "review" linked to it which can be edited by users. This review can follow many different patterns. It can be a link to spookshow or to a forum article. It can contain text directly entered by the users, or a hybrid where an excerpt is used in combination to a link to an outside source. Also feel free to append your own opinion to whatever is there. Something of the form "A review was done by Spookshow <here>, Model Railroad Magazine <here> but personally I think this engine sucks - Joe User". If you are going to append to the review, just be sure to say who you are as a courtesy to other users.
Took a quick test drive, and I must say that's an ambitious project you've taken on. One bit of feedback: it's very frustrating to me to get back a list of returns where every individual part number has an identical entry. For instance, if I'm looking at BLI centipedes, there are dozens of entries in the database because each road number offered has a discrete entry. That makes long lists virtually unmanageable, because they get flooded with redundant data. Is there a way to return summarized results that could drilled down into with a click? For instance, in a search for PRR diesels, just return a single line for BLI centipedes that could be clicked on to get a full listing of schemes, road numbers, and individual part numbers.